THE HUNGER GAMES CATCHING FIRE - AND - BY SUZANNE COLLINS
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About The Hunger Games Discussion Questions for The Hunger Games In this gripping young adult novel set in a future with unsettling parallels to our present, the nation of 1. H ow does Katniss feel about the country of Panem? 9. W hat makes Katniss and Rue trust each other to become Panem consists of a shining Capitol surrounded by twelve outlying Districts, in the ruins of the area once Why does she need to make her face “an indifferent partners? What does Katniss gain from this friendship mask” and be careful what she says in public? besides companionship? Is Katniss and Rue’s partnership known as North America. Sixteen-year-old Katniss and her friend Gale forage for food in the woods formed for different reasons than the other group’s? surrounding their impoverished District, in this stratified society where the Capitol controls all resources. 2. D escribe the relationships of Katniss with Gale, with The main support for both their families, Katniss and Gale are apprehensive of the approaching annual Prim, with her mother. How do those relationships 10. Discuss the ways in which the Gamemakers control define her personality? Why does she say about Peeta, the environment and “entertainment” value of the Reaping, when two “tributes” between the ages of twelve and eighteen will be chosen by lottery from each “I feel like I owe him something, and I hate owing Games. How does it affect the tributes to know they of the twelve districts to compete in The Hunger Games, a survival contest on live TV in which teenagers people.” How does her early encounter with Peeta affect are being manipulated to make the Games more exciting their relationship after they are chosen as tributes? for the gamblers and viewers? Does knowing that she fight to the death and there can be only one victor. is on live TV make Katniss behave differently than she 3. H ow does the fact that the tributes are always on camera would otherwise? When her beloved younger sister Prim is chosen as one of the tributes, Katniss volunteers to go in affect their behavior from the time they are chosen? Does it make it easier or harder for them to accept their fate? 11. When does Katniss first realize that Peeta does care her sister’s place. Her fellow tribute from District 12 is Peeta, a boy with whom she soon develops a How are the “career tributes” different from the others? for her and is trying to keep her alive? When does she complicated relationship. After traveling to the Capitol and undergoing elaborate training and preparation, realize her own feelings for him? Did Haymitch think 4. W hy are the tributes given stylists and dressed so all along that he could keep them both alive by stressing Katniss and Peeta are launched into the game. In the terrifying events that follow, Katniss must marshal all elaborately for the opening ceremony? Does this the love story? Are they actually in love? her skills to stay alive and all her emotions to remain a caring human being in the face of the stark brutality ceremony remind you of events in our world, either of the Games. past or present? Compare those ceremonies in real life 12. What do you think is the cruelest part of the Hunger to the one in the story. Games? What kind of people would devise this spectacle for the entertainment of their populace? “It’s hard to choose one element that inspired The Hunger Games,” says Suzanne Collins. 5. W hen Peeta declares his love for Katniss in the Can you see parallels between these Games and the “Probably the first seeds were planted when, as an eight-year-old with a mythology obsession, I read interview, does he really mean it or did Haymitch society that condones them, and other related events create the “star-crossed lovers” story? What does and cultures in the history of the world? the story of Theseus. The myth told how in punishment for past deeds, Athens periodically had Haymitch mean when he says, “It’s all a big show. to send seven youths and seven maidens to Crete where they were thrown in the Labyrinth and It’s all how you’re perceived.” Why do they need to 13. In 1848, Karl Marx wrote in The Communist devoured by the monstrous Minotaur. Even as a third grader, I could appreciate the ruthlessness of this impress sponsors and what are those sponsors looking Manifesto, “The history of all hitherto existing society for when they are watching the Games? is the history of class struggles.” Discuss this statement message. ‘Mess with us and we’ll do something worse than kill you. We’ll kill your children.’ as it applies to the society and government of Panem. 6. B efore the Games start, Peeta tells Katniss, “… I want to Do you believe there is any chance to eradicate class “Other early influences would have to include watching too many gladiator movies which die as myself… I don’t want them to change me in there. struggles in the future? Turn me into some kind of monster that I’m not.” What dramatized the Romans’ flair for turning executions into popular entertainment, my military does this tell you about Peeta? What does he fear more 14. Reality TV has been a part of the entertainment specialist dad who took us to battlefields for family vacations, and touring with a sword-fighting than death? Is he able to stay true to himself during the world since the early days of television (with shows Games? such as Candid Camera and the Miss America Pageant), company in high school. But it wasn’t until the much more recent experience of channel surfing but in the twenty-first century there has been a between reality TV programming and actual war coverage that the story for this series came to me.” 7. W hy does Katniss ignore Haymitch’s advice to head tremendous growth of competitive shows and survival directly away from the Cornucopia? Did she do the shows. Discuss this phenomenon with respect to The right thing to fight for equipment? What are the most Hunger Games. What other aspects of our popular important skills she has for staying alive—her knowledge culture do you see reflected in this story? of nature?—her skill with bow and arrow?— her trap- ping ability? What qualities of her personality keep her going—her capacity for love?—her intelligence?—her self-control? 8. W hy does Peeta join with the Career Tributes in the beginning of the Games? What does he hope to gain? Why do they accept him when they start hunting as a group? Why do groups form in the beginning when they know only one of them will be able to survive?
About Catching Fire Discussion Questions for Catching Fire Katniss and Peeta have returned to their home District, but the return is hardly triumphant. 1. How did Katniss’s participation in the Games change 10. What do Katniss and Peeta learn when they watch Haunted by nightmares of the brutal deaths in the arena, Katniss is confused by her feelings for her relationship with Gale? Why does she say, “The the video of Haymitch’s Hunger Games: the Second Games have spoiled even that….There’s no going back.” Quarter Quell? How does it affect their understanding Peeta, while her relationship with her hunting partner and oldest friend, Gale, is changed in subtle of Haymitch and the mockingjay symbol? How did ways. Most challenging, though, is her relationship to the leaders in the Capitol. Her act of defiance 2. What emotions does Peeta stir in Katniss? Though Haymitch trick the Capitol? she is stiff and formal with him, what are her true in attempting a double suicide at the end of the Games forced them to allow both her and Peeta to feelings? How did the events in the first Games affect 11. How do both Peeta and Katniss mock the Gamemakers live, and there are intimations that Katniss has now become a symbol for rebellion in the Districts. their relationship? during the “talent show” portion of the training? Why do they each take the chance of offending those who The Victory Tour, designed to remind the people in the Districts of the power of the Capitol, may 3. Why does President Snow come to Katniss’s home? will control the Games? How does this change their be having quite a different effect this year. What does he mean when he says, “… you have feelings for each other? provided a spark which left unattended may grow into an inferno….” What, exactly, was the significance 12. Discuss the effect on Katniss of what happens to Darius Then the president announces plans for the Quarter Quell, the seventy-fifth anniversary Games. of the handful of poisonous berries at the end of and Cinna. Why are the Capitol officials attacking The Hunger Games? those who have befriended her? Why is Cinna attacked Every twenty-five years the Capitol devises a new twist for the reaping, and this year they announce just before Katniss is placed in the Arena? that the tributes will be chosen from among the victors of previous Games. Thrown into the arena 4. How do the events of the Victory Tour affect Katniss and Peeta, their relationship to each other, and their 13. Why is Katniss determined to keep Peeta alive during once more with Peeta, Katniss’s strategy must be different this year, but even Katniss doesn’t realize feelings about their future? the Games, even at the expense of her own life? When all the implications of these Games and the outside forces that are gathering strength to potentially does she realize the importance of forming alliances 5. Why does the Capitol devise a special reaping with the other tributes? Why does Finnick save Peeta’s undermine the entire society. procedure for every twenty-fifth Game? Do you believe life? When does Katniss realize that her first impression the requirements for this Quarter Quell were decided of Finnick was wrong? in the past or were they designed for this Game to force Katniss and Peeta back to the Arena? 14. Describe the relationship between Katniss and Johanna. What made Katniss realize that Wiress and Beetee 6. What is the significance of the mockingjay image? would be helpful allies in the Arena? What important What does it mean to the people in the Districts contribution does each one of the allies make to keep and the people in the Capitol? Why does Plutarch Heav- the group alive? What is the role of the unseen “spon- ensbee show Katniss the hidden mockingjay sors”? image on his watch? Discuss how the mockingjay species developed and how Katniss happened to wear the 15. What is more harmful to the players in this Game— pin during the first Games. the physical traumas like the fog and rain of fire, or the emotional trauma of hearing the jabberjays? 7. Why does Gale refuse Katniss’s offer to try to escape into the wild? What does he mean when he says, “It can’t be 16. What does Haymitch mean when he tells Katniss before about just saving us anymore”? How does Gale’s whip- the Game begins, “You just remember who the enemy ping change Katniss’s thinking about escape and her is—that’s all.” Who is the enemy? Have the other feelings for Gale? tributes been trying to keep Peeta or Katniss alive? Which of them is most important to the rebellion? 8. What makes Katniss say, “No wonder I won the Games. No decent person ever does.” Is she being too 17. Why were Katniss and Peeta not aware of the plans for hard on herself? What makes her realize that fighting the the rebellion? Why were they kept in the dark when Capitol is more important than running away? What is other tributes knew about it? the importance of her meeting with Bonnie 18. What is the meaning of the title? How many different and Twill in the forest? ways can you identify the theme of “catching fire” in 9. Why does the Capitol push plans for the wedding this volume? of Katniss and Peeta if they know that they will be returning to the Games in the Quarter Quell? What does the Capitol hope to gain by sending previous victors back to the Games? Is it really, as Katniss says, a way to show “that hope was an illusion”?
Suggestions for Further Reading Comparing the Books Fiction Nonfiction 1. Discuss the differences between the Games in the first volume and the second—the training sessions, the Feed, by M. T. Anderson (Candlewick Press, 2004) Black Potatoes, by Susan Campbell Bartoletti (Houghton interviews, the set-up of the Arena, the strategies that Katniss and Peeta use. How is each of them changed In this futuristic society, a “feed” is embedded in the Mifflin, 2005) by the time they spend in the Arena? brain of every person to keep up a steady stream of Hunger and starvation during the potato famine of information, entertainment, communication, and 1845–1850 affected the lives of millions in Ireland, 2. What are the forces that contribute to the rebellion in Catching Fire? Were they already starting to happen in ultimately, control. Survival in this world depends on while the stratified society of Irish peasants and English The Hunger Games? What clues about the rebellion can you find in the books? how well your individual “feed” is functioning and how overlords contributed to the brutality of the situation. well you fit in with the popular culture. 3. Why are all citizens of Panem required to watch The Hunger Games on television? How does this affect the people? Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why, by Why haven’t they rebelled earlier against the brutality of the Games? Discuss the effect of television and reality TV GemX, by Nicki Singer (Holiday House, 2008) Laurence Gonzales (W. W. Norton & Company, 2004) in your own life. A future society is divided into the “Enhanced” and the An exploration of the biological and psychological “Natural Born,” both manipulated by a heartless ruler; reasons people risk their lives and why some are better 4. What are your predictions for the third volume in the series? but love reaches across the society’s barriers and brings at it than others. hope to a few. 5. Compare the society in Panem (the government, its tight control on the population, and the growing rebellion) to The Night Olympic Team: Fighting to Keep Drugs Out of others that you have studied or encountered in books or films. Consider historical and contemporary nations as Graceling, by Kristin Cashore (Harcourt, 2008) the Games, by Caroline Hatton (Boyds Mills Press, 2008) well as fictional worlds. What does Panem have in common with these cultures, and how does it differ? What can Lady Katsa, graced with the ability to win every fight, Behind the scenes at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt we learn about our own world from studying and reading about historical and fictional societies? defies her tyrannical uncle, and through her own feelings Lake City, a team of scientists works through the night to of compassion and her growing friendship with a foreign discover the use of performance enhancing drugs in the prince, finds her own way in the world. athletes. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, by J. K. Rowling Rock, Paper, Scissors: Game Theory in Everyday Life, by (Scholastic, 2000) Len Fisher (Basic Books, 2008) In his fourth year at Hogwarts School, Harry’s name A Nobel-prize winner discusses the theory behind deci- Connect to The Classics is mysteriously chosen in a lottery to compete in the Triwizard Tournament that pits champions from several sions people make in competitive situations and the strategies that can change the outcome of their actions. The themes and setting of The Hunger Games and Catching Fire can be connected for teen readers to many pieces schools against each other in a contest of magical skills, of classic literature that are required reading for high school students. reasoning powers, wit, and endurance. Stop Teaching Our Kids to Kill: A Call to Action Against TV, Movie, and Video Game Violence, by Lt. Col. Dave Greek legend tells how King Minos of Crete demanded that seven Athenian boys and seven Athenian girls be Sunrise Over Fallujah, by Walter Dean Myers Grossman (The Crown Publishing Group, 1999) sacrificed in the labyrinth of the Minotaur until the hero Theseus volunteered to go in the place of one of the (Scholastic, 2008) This book presents an argument, based on research, youths and was able to slay the monster. The actual arena of a war zone in Iraq provides a setting against the influences that incite violent actions in youth in which present-day soldiers must be constantly alert to today. In The Grapes of Wrath, set in the Dust Bowl years in the United States, extreme hunger leads ordinary people to seek stay alive while making difficult decisions about who are extraordinary ways to stay alive during the Great Depression. potential allies and who are their true enemies. The Worst Hard Time, by Timothy Egan (Houghton Mifflin, 2005) The futuristic novels Brave New World, Nineteen-Eighty-Four, and Fahrenheit 451 all reflect the rigid control and Uglies, by Scott Westerfeld (Simon Pulse, 2005) Egan relates a chilling chronicle of starvation and stratified society of the populace that we see in The Hunger Games and Catching Fire. A compulsory operation at the age of sixteen creates a hardship during the Dust Bowl years of the 1930s in uniform standard of “beauty” in a futuristic society. The the American Midwest, when economic issues and The Lord of the Flies explores how vicious young people can become, when forced to survive in a wilderness setting. story continues in Pretties (2005), Specials (2006), and environmental disasters combined to change the lives Extras (2007). of an entire population. “The Lottery,” a short story by Shirley Jackson, first published in The New Yorker in 1948, is a chilling tale of ritualistic murder committed as a fertility rite in small-town America (The Lottery and Other Stories, 2nd edition, Unwind, by Neal Shusterman (Simon & Schuster, 2007) by Shirley Jackson, Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2005). Connor, Risa, and Lev are literally running for their lives in the future world where troubled teens may be chosen by a parent for “unwinding,” in which their body parts are harvested for use by other people.
About the Author Suzanne Collins has had a successful and prolific career writing for children’s television. She has worked on the staffs of several Nickelodeon shows, including the Emmy-nominated hit Clarissa Explains It All and The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo. She received a Writer’s Guild of America nomination in animation for co-writing the critically acclaimed Christmas special, Santa, Baby! Suzanne Collins made her mark in children’s literature with the New York Times bestselling series the Underland Chronicles, for middle grade readers. Her debut novel, Gregor the Overlander, received numerous accolades both in the United States and abroad. Photo Credit: Cap Pryor Suzanne Collins lives with her family in Connecticut. critical acclaim for the hunger games “I was so obsessed with this book.”—Stephenie Meyer, author of the Twilight Saga “I couldn’t stop reading…addictive.” — Stephen King, Entertainment Weekly “Brilliantly plotted and perfectly paced.”—The New York Times The Hunger Games Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins by Suzanne Collins Ages 12 & up, 0-439-02348-3, $17.99 Ages 12 & up, 0-439-02349-1, $17.99 Both books are available from your local bookstore or usual supplier, or from: Scholastic, 2931 East McCarty Street, P.O. Box 7502, Jefferson City, MO 65102. www.scholastic.com/thehungergames Discussion Guide prepared by Connie Rockman, Youth Literature Consultant, adjunct professor of children’s and young adult literature, and Editor of the 8th, 9th, and 10th books in the H. W. Wilson Junior Authors and Illustrators series. SCHOLASTIC and associated logos are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of Scholastic Inc.
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